Quote from vladiator:
No it's not child's play and yes, some of them do have contracts open while they teach. I know of at least two at this university that trade actively. I'm not a professor yet, but I often give my students a quiz and check the action in the meantime, add/close a position here and there etc. So I don't see your point.
Besides, you misunderstood mine. Although this task might not be easy, the theories provide the tools to better understand and use the action.
wait a minute vlad, you yourself used the words "easily" and "predict".
to mean that means that market action is easily predictable according to the theories these professors have come up with.
well, if they can actually tell what is going to happen, then hey, they must be making millions right? if not, they need their brains checked.
Unless what you are using for trading is grounded in sound economic theory, it has a high probability of being spurious. At least you can't tell if it is. I'm not sure about you, but I'd rather trade something that is not just a result of mindless data mining but is rather based in solid economic principles and thus is more likely to persist.
Cheers.
now stuff like this just kills me.
if it's ME that's doing the analysis and research, i'm just 'data mining' and my conclusions are likely to be spurious.
but if it's a professor with 16 letters after his name -- who is looking at the same data, mind you -- his conclusions are based in 'solid economic principles'.
well, i just have to take you up on that last point.
before that said professor sat down to do his latest research, the 'solid economic principles' in existence until then had failed (obviously) to make any consistent predictions about market action, right? so that researcher is then coming up with
new hypotheses and theories -- or, in other words, looking at some set of data, forming some hypotheses, testing them out, (exactly what i do, btw) and then adding his conclusions to the body of 'solid economic principles'. man, i wish i had a can't lose proposition like economic theory of financial markets -- you know, the kind where no matter how bad/wrong it is, it's infinitely updatable...